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tv   Click  BBC News  September 22, 2018 3:30pm-4:02pm BST

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it is turning into a cool weekend for most of us. for most of us. the satellite picture shows what is going on. picture shows what is going on. stripe of cloud working "that a female might claim the across the atlantic. atlantic. scholarship". across southern areas and another is to come tomorrow. to come tomorrow. can't do these things. slowly but surely we lose the rain from southern areas. from southern areas. might have taken her? a picture's starting to emerge of the mysterious will turn quite chilly, particularly across scotland. miss harrison. across scotland. blue colour on our temperature chart for glasgow and edinburgh. for glasgow and edinburgh. out in the countryside, close to freezing. the countryside, close to freezing. to growing fruit. there could be some frost and student gardeners say it's hard to tomorrow, particularly in scotland. imagine women being excluded. particularly in scotland. it makes me feel very frustrated and angry. high pressure, northern parts will be the driest and brightest. be the driest and brightest. further south is the next lot of rain. south is the next lot of rain. moving into the midlands and east anglia through the that make morning.
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it possible. anglia through the but we still need to go further to make sure everyone's included. morning. miss harrison paved the way for a new time, we expect the generation of gardeners. the rhs wants to make sure her name's rain to clear away. not forgotten. away. them more about her. i'd really love to know what happened next. north—westerly wind, up to 50 mph, elsewhere a breezy day. elsewhere a breezy day. but again, a mixture in horticulture, and make a of sunshine and showers. living that way? showers. scotland, particularly, some because she's clearly a character, and did could be heavy. she prevail? and with your help, maybe they'll be heavy. finally solve the mystery. you could catch a shower anywhere as well as sunny spells. anywhere as well as sunny spells. temperatures helen briggs, bbc struggling. news. now it's time for a look the best, the channel at the weather with ben rich. islands a little warmer. little warmer. into sunday evening, the skies clear and most fade away. the skies clear and most fade weekend across the country. cool and bright for some, cool and wet for others. away. into monday, high pressure starts to work its way in. work its way in. rain across the south. ahead, especially in the south, where it will warm up.
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where it will warm up. outbreaks of rain at times and feeling cooler. this so not especially cold here. is degrees, a little colder in the countryside in scotland. for many northern areas through tomorrow morning. bbc clearing away from the south—east by lunch time. with that, for a time, pretty gusty north and northwesterly winds. news. the headlines at 1! in the northwest. hello, this more respect from brussels in is bbc the brexit talks. news with annita mcveigh. his party's annual conference. the headlines... theresa may's proposals
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his is the party of work. equality. in liverpool saying theirs in the party of sexual harassment has no place equality. whatsoever in our movement. # gertcha! #. chas and dave, has died. he was 7a and being treated for cancer. now on bbc news, it's time for click. century fox and comcast submit their final bids. with my face on his shirt. india — a technology superpower in
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waiting. 2 billion people here are aged 35 or under. and start—ups. we haven't yet been able to bring the world to india. so it is high time we put that right. setting of bikaner house, new delhi. new delhi! thank you for having us! are you well? cheering and applause. we have seen on our travels.
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took them to the future, and to the distant past. era city in the world. different organisations. of how it would have looked in his heyday. so we are now going to take a walk—through of the temple site. to watch for the routes that i want to describe. and this is how i ‘m going to show it where i want to go.
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where you are on the model too. what used to be existing. into how others might experience this kind of virtual tour. it's crying out for a virtual reality set up, obviously. than those from times gone by. who are exploring things. so that is the excitement.
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after graduation. and it has certainly had some global success stories. recently, binny ba nsal. arrived in the country. it's considered one of india's most successful start—ups. the deal made binny a billionaire.
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himself to get a snapshot of the indian tech industry. how have you seen the indian tech scene change in the last 20 years? the indian tech scene really started evolving in the last 10— 12 years. work in data companies. literally, you could count them on yourfingers. started coming out of india. growth in the number of start—ups and people working in... why is that? multiple reasons.
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more people on the internet. now we have more than 350—400 million people connected. to really dream big and execute. what do you think india is really good at? of the ceos today are indian. businesses globally much better than maybe their chinese counterparts. what do you think india is not good at?
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a mindset change. artificial intelligence, good or bad for india? i think both. it is very hard to predict which side the penny falls. societal issues at scale. i can imagine that happening. and the right solutions. so i am more optimistic than pessimistic about al. thank you for your
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time. thank you. can a self driving car survive india's traffic? and environment conditions in india. and deal with the chaotic traffic and peak traffic hours in india. see? not quite as crazy as you first thought. hello and welcome to the week in tech.
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into its station in germany. sony revealed either a very small playstation or a very big hand. and a soft—limbed robotjellyfish bobbled onto the scene. trouble over his tweets. accused without evidence of being a child abuser. into financial tweets made by musk last month. passenger for its mission to the moon. for the first time. from a distance of six metres. into the atmosphere where it will burn up. 3—dimensional motion sculptures from normal 2—dimensional videos. recreate a 3d version of the scene that can be rotated and explored. learn more about how they move.
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without a record—breaking two—ton spider robot? engineer matt denton. the very specific accolade of largest rideable hexapod robot. but with a top speed of 0. if not in your nightmares. afghanistan, tajikistan, and uzbekistan. and now we are expanding further.
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and to introduce the people who will be hosting them. are you ready! it is the largest bbc hub outside the uk. stories and share content between each other. you have tamil, murati, hindi, gujarati, punjabi and telegu. who's currently rehearsing for click tamil. brilliant, isn't it? in fact, click tamil launches in the next two weeks. broadcast in more than 20 languages. are discovering on the ground.
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or even a smart chessboard. very hogwarts. in india's national parks. here is just a taster of that story. these are pictures from jaipur‘thalana national park. at a height of about 30 metres. of the system being tested here. have been installed. rotate at 360 degrees. which is situated several kilometres away from the park.
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the drones can immediately swing into action for further monitoring. officials reach the spot. recordings of cameras can be seen on a portable device. with the help of real—time tracking, it is easy to reach the location. of artificial intelligence. and reach the localised position.
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to take decisions related to surveillance on their own. is safe for animals. but one cannot rule out the possibilities of bird hit. in other national parks as well. and better planning. especially on theirjobs. one company hoping to ride the ai boom is imerit.
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place by clearly annotating training images like these. could you explain to everyone here what imerit does? in order for al algorithms to work, they have to be trained. it's like computer programming. if you just put a computer there and say work it doesn't work. so you have to programme it. that's called training ia. the best results out of their ai algorithms. so you have a huge human workforce training ia. that we will put up on the screen. to create this training data,
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yeah. that's correct. humans in the loop of ai. and sending back that like an insurance investigator would do. this is where we have probably done the most work. driving autonomous cars. we work with a variety of car manufacturers. and if you look at this, it's called bounding boxes and polygons. but it's at a pixel level. so it's dense pixel segmentation. onto the crosswalk. how do you know whether that belongs to a cat, to a small child? if it is a rock or a wad of paper? and you can have up
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to 50—70 different things you are marking. and learns from that? algorithms so that their computer can learn from it. for crucial societal applications, particularly like healthcare. is about a third of the data. to train the ai algorithms. to this kind of care and
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you can do pre—screening for cancer cells. what is really important is the type of person that you employee. contribution of imerit. people per quarter. so ai is creating jobs. wow. 50% of the workforce are women. yes. applause. and 80% of the workforce are coming from low income backgrounds. they could be young muslim women. we have a centre called the centre of excellence for computer vision. that's for image processing. and that centre is all young muslim women in a very poor community.
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from the beginning is inclusive of the workforce. it has diversity. and it has a lot of moral ethics that go with it. of the 20th century as india's capital moved here. since, there is one thing that you really notice. trees. that were planted way back then. of chopping down trees is even suggested. air quality here, as you probably know, is terrible. and trees are seen as at least part of the solution. wall around the
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city. and other pollution. and it is notjust here in delhi that trees are big news. huge amounts of illegal logging. the question is, could technology help? if you like trees, you will love shimla. pines sprout from the tarmac, houses are built around them. so they know if any go missing. many do. one reason is because constructable land here is so scarce and costly.
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that can be built on. now the forest department is turning to technology to fight the felling. people stealing stuff. physically on the ground. be monitored remotely. 2a hours a day. if a tree's being tampered with. yes, exactly. tree, the vibration gets into this. and cutting the tree down? there is a pin inside?
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yes. if you look at the reverse of this rfid tag. is pulled out from the tree. then a signal which directly goes to the receiver. been illegally felled. to be through technology and taken out of the hands of people. they can be threatened. so we wanted a system which is not based on trust. which can only come from technology. crime is involved. they are very valuable commodities. that's £5,500, $7,000.
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there is an active mafia. they have guns and they are violent people. for them we need drone surveillance. intelligence engine. and locate individual trees. it really happened. rfid and drones, a long way from numbers daubed on bark. and stopping the crims sharpening their axes.
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is chance you might escape. for the government, and also for the person who's cut the tree. if you cut a tree you can't escape any more. had a pretty good evening. and that is it for now from india. thank you so much for watching. where you can see loads of extra backstage photos and fun. and we will see you soon!
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